Ex-President Aristide Publicly Supports Fanmi Lavalas Candidate

For the first time in four years, former Haitian president Jean-Bertrand Aristide spoke publicly on September 30, the 24th anniversary of the first coup against him. He spoke out in support of the Fanmi Lavalas presidential candidate, Maryse Narcisse, and also demanded unity among the poor masses. Thousands of Fanmi Lavalas supporters gathered in front of Aristide’s home to hear him speak.

Former Haiti president Aristide breaks his silence

Yahoo! News

October 1, 2015

Port-au-Prince (AFP) – Haiti’s former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide has spoken in public for the first time since returning from exile in 2011, calling on Haitians to elect his party’s candidate as president.

Speaking from the back of a pickup truck outside his home late Wednesday, Aristide galvanized a crowd of about 2,000 followers who waited for hours to hear him speak.

“We must mobilize ourselves to vote democratically for doctor Maryse Narcisse’s arrival at the national palace,” he said referring to the candidate of his Fanmi Lavalas party.

The first round of the presidential elections are scheduled for October 25.

Narcisse, a physician and longtime Lavalas activist, is one of 54 candidates running to succeed Michel Martelly as Haiti’s president.

Reprising some of his best-known slogans, which followers repeated in chorus, Aristide, a firebrand former Catholic priest, called for unity among Haitians.

“You the victims of insecurity, of abuse, of hunger, of unemployment… and all Haitians who are victims of repatriations from Santo Domingo must mobilize together.”

“Rich and poor, we must understand each other to re-stitch the flag of unity.”

Aristide was speaking on an important day for his followers, for it was September 30, 1991 that he was forced out of office and into exile by a military coup just seven months after becoming Haiti’s first democratically elected president.

He returned to power from 1994 to 1996 and again from 2001 to 2004, when he was chased from office by a popular revolt.